How would you rate Abed in Community as a DM ?

How would you rate Abed in Community as a DM ?

Brilliant, but somewhat frustrating at times. Basically like every M. Night Shyamalan film up to and including Signs, ignoring everything after that.

In Advanced Dungeons & Dragons he literally let one of the players split off from the group and ran back and forth so they could play separately, then let them torment another character in a way that would hurt the player OOC.

Which is to say, he's dedicated but kind of a pushover in the face of the biggest That Guy imaginable.

I would play with him, given the right group. Which is to say, given the study group minus Pierce.

Pretty good. Willing to allow for unforseen consequences and prepared with plenty of contingencies.

Speaking of TV, how would you judge other presentations of DnD in other shows?

0/10 didn't crack down on Pierce's blatant metagaming.

Freaks and Geeks had the best DnD episode.

>le carlos and musics
fuck off

He's terrible, obviously. That's the joke.

Bit of a control freak, but he really gets into the game.

>allowed and responded to ERP
>placated ThatGuy and adhered too strongly to the rules rather than putting his foot down when Pierce was being completely fucking out of line
>being Abed past season 1
0/10 get the fuck out of my house.

Which module were they running with the red dragon?

Oh like you wouldn't ERP with Annie

...

I've only seen the first one, but considering they were trying to empower the one guy to not kill himself and nothing would get done by just letting him do shit, so it's possible that he could be letting Pierce do metashit to power up and prove to be a more powerful enemy to overcome. With the ERP he's probably hardline on acting out stuff rather than doing rolls, so if anything he probably wouldn't let them advance WITHOUT ERP.
The Caverms of Draoomls, thanks.

Caverns of Draconis.

(Not a real module, apparently.)

That's not the-

Goddamn, she's so fucking hot you're right.

Well that's disappointing. What do they play in the second D&D episode?

Home brew to allow that teacher and his son to reconnect

0/10. He rolled for the players what the fuck

pierce was the only one who took it seriously, and fat neil should have been allowed to kill himself

RAW

>trusting anyone in community not to try and fudge their roles

Rolling for them was the smartest decision he made.

This. Pierce read tons of manuals and source materials to gain knowledge his character didn't have and use it in-game.

Nah, Pierce meta-games the entire time.

Have you watched Harmonquest? It's a cartoon that follows Dan Harmon's (the main writer of Community) DnD group (and a guest player) playing a campaign.

They did have one guest (Thomas Middleditch) who actually plays RPGs and he brought his own dice and rolled for himself. Dan asked the GM if he'd ever heard of the players rolling for themselves and the GM had to explain to him that that's what almost every other group does. Harmon seemed genuinely shocked to find this out.

So, basically, the writer's DnD group actually does play like that and he didn't know that it was unusual.

More so than you could imagine.

Yeah but he's playing fucking Pathfinder in that too so wgasa
>I really like Thomas Middleditch in that episode
>I find him annoying af everywhere else

Except that group didn't form until over three years after this episode aired. It's just a lack of research, or it's intentional because watching everyone roll dice for 22 minutes would be boring as fuck and, besides, none of the characters besides Abed and maybe Chang would even own dice.

Correction - it was more like 1 year, not 3.

I have always really liked Middleditch. Got to see him live in February, improving a Shakespearean play. It was dope (and I don't even like Shakespeare)

I think that he's always had that GM though. Having the players roll wouldn't take any longer than him rolling, except that they'd have to call out numbers. And I could totally see Abed being the type who has a fishing box full of dice.

*improvising a Shakespearean play

>he's always had that GM

No, he didn't even meet Spencer until he showed up to one of his podcasts. Completely serendipitous meeting.

Solid atmospherics, strong on mechanics. Very weak on names.

Joseph Gordon Diehard

Impossible to rate because sitcom reality is different from reality reality. If we judge by the standards of reality^2 then he's a shitty GM for allowing blantant metagaming, bullshit PvP, and so forth. By sitcom reality? I'm not sure. I guess you make allowances for the meta-gaming as a plot contrivance. The PvP shit, and following the rules strictly even when it screws up the game both seem core to Abed's character though, so those count against him. Also, he doesn't exactly put a lot of personality into his game. So I guess that going by sitcom reality, he's middling.